Energy and commodity markets are constantly changing, and have recently experienced extreme fluctuations in price due to global gas shortages, post-lockdown industrial demand, and low wind generation in Europe. For example, on 1st October, the November gas price at Dutch TTF hub hit an all-time high of 97.73 euros per megawatt-hour (MWh), up around 400% this year.
Whilst volatility is expected in energy trading markets, market participants such as utilities, industrial firms and trading houses increasingly face a higher frequency of extreme events. A recent Energies MDPI paper points out that “electricity prices are very volatile, they vary hourly, even minute by minute in some markets, due to constant changes in supply and demand, and they are affected by several parameters, e.g., weather, time of day, suspension of supply, maintenance ,”
How, then, can market participants realistically expect to keep up with this continued level of volatility on a minute-by-minute basis, which is the new reality they are faced with?